ElEcTrOnic MATEriAlS AnD ApplicATiOnS 2016

call for papers call for papers
Abstracts due by September 9, 2015
Abstracts due by September 9, 2015
January 20-22 | DoubleTree by Hilton Orlando at Sea World® | Orlando, Florida USA
Electronic Materials
and Applications 2016
Electronic Materials and Applications 2016 addresses emerging needs, opportunities and key challenges in the
field of electronic materials and applications. Technical presentations highlight advancements in materials and
devices for electronics, sensors, energy generation and storage, photovoltaics, and LEDs.
ceramics.org/ema2016
E lectronic Materials
January 20-22 | DoubleTree by Hilton Orlando at
INTRODUCTION
Organizing Committee
Electronic Materials and Applications 2016 is an international conference focused
on electroceramic materials and their applications in electronic, electromechanical, magnetic, dielectric and optical components, devices and systems. Jointly programmed by the Electronics Division and Basic Science Division of The American
Ceramic Society, EMA 2016 will take place at the DoubleTree by Hilton Orlando at
Sea World® January 20–22, 2016.
EMA 2016 is designed for researchers, engineers, technologists, and students interestd in basic science, engineering, and applications of electroceramic materials.
Speakers include an international mix of university, industrial, and federal laboratory participants to exchange information and ideas on latest developments in
theory, experimental investigation and applications of electroceramic materials.
Students are highly encouraged to attend and participate in a special symposium
that features awards for best oral and poster presentations.
The technical program includes plenary talks, invited lectures, contributed papers,
poster presentations, and open discussions. EMA 2016 features symposia focused
on ferroics and multiferroics; dielectrics; sintering and grain growth; piezoelectrics; thermoelectrics; and superconductors. Other symposia emphasize broader
themes covering structure, interfaces and novel characterization methods; doping,
defects and nanoscale phenomena; layered oxide and related materials; thin film
synthesis and integration science; nanocomposites; and computational design of
electronic materials.
The meeting includes several networking opportunities to facilitate collaborations for scientific and technical advances related to materials, components, devices, and systems. A separate, student-run symposium, sponsored by the ACerS
President’s Council of Student Advisors, will feature undergraduate and graduate
student research and provide development and networking opportunities for our
next generation of scientists.
Brady Gibbons, Electronics Division
Oregon State University; [email protected]
Gibbons
John Blendell, Basic Science Division
Purdue University; [email protected]
Blendell
Haiyan Wang, Electronics Division
Texas A&M University; [email protected]
Wang
Dominique Chatain, Basic Science Division
CNRS-CINaM; [email protected]
We are pleased to build on the previous successes of this conference series in
providing a distinctive forum to address emerging needs, opportunities, and key
challenges in the field of electronic materials and applications. We anticipate this
meeting will continue to highlight the most recent scientific advances and technological innovations in the field, and to facilitate the interactions and collaborations
that will help shape its future.
2014-2015 OFFICERS
Please join us in Orlando, Florida to participate in this unique experience!
Basic Science Division
Electronics Division
Chair: Bryan Huey
Trustee: Winnie Wong-Ng
DoubleTree by Hilton Orlando
at Sea World®
Chair-Elect: Shen Dillon
Chair: Timothy J. Haugan
Vice Chair: Xingbo Liu
Chair-Elect: Haiyan Wang
10100 International Drive, Orlando, FL 32821
Secretary: Dunbar Birnie
Vice-chair: Geoff Brennecka
407-352-1100 / 800-327-0363
Programming chairs:
John Blendell
Dominique Chatain
Secretary: Brady J. Gibbons
Rate:
Single/double/triple/quad – $149.00
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Chatain
Secretary-Elect: Rick Ubic
Programming chairs:
Haiyan Wang
Brady J. Gibbons
Abstracts due by September 9, 2015
and Applications 2016
Sea World® | Orlando, Florida USA
Confirmed Plenary Speakers
Technical Sessions
Darrell Schlom, Cornell University, USA
S1. Multiferroic Materials and Multilayer Ferroic Heterostructures:
Properties and Applications
James Warren, National Institute of Standards and Technology, USA
TBD
Student Awards and Competition:
The EMA 2016 conference follows its established tradition of strongly supporting undergraduate and graduate student participation.
• Six awards with cash prizes will be given at EMA 2016 for best student
presentations and posters.
• Shortly after the abstract submission deadline, the meeting’s top
abstracts with student presenters will be selected. Finalists will have
the option of presenting in their original symposium and/or as part of
special lunchtime sessions on Wednesday and Thursday highlighting
the work of top students. Only presentations during the lunch sessions
will be judged for cash awards, which will be given out at the confer ence banquet on Thursday evening.
Failure: The Greatest Teacher
The vast majority of scientific literature and conference talks report positive
results, but there’s a lot to be learned from negative results and missteps
as well. After the “successful” part of the meeting closes, come hear
recognized leaders in the field discuss failure—and perhaps recount some
of their most spectacular learning experiences—during a frank and friendly
discussion in a relaxed atmosphere. Speakers and audience alike are
encouraged to check their egos at the door for this event that has turned
into an EMA highlight. If you would like to speak at this symposium, please
contact Geoff Brennecka ([email protected]).
This symposium will provide an international, interdisciplinary forum for scientists
and engineers from academia, industry, and national laboratories interested in
research, characterization, development, manufacturing, design, and applications
of multiferroic materials and multilayer ferroic heterostructures. The symposium
covers a wide spectrum of research activities, from basic science to technological applications. Additionally, this symposium will unite researchers from a broad
range of disciplines to discuss current state-of-the-art, physics, engineering, and
future challenges of multicomponent, multifunctional materials. Organizers seek
papers focusing on understanding such materials systems utilizing theoretical, experimental and/or novel sophisticated characterization methods. The relationship
between materials growth, microstructure, and the relation between microstructure and physical properties will be highlighted. Emphasis will also be devoted
to applications of these materials in sensors/actuators, energy harvesting, and
solid-state heating/cooling.
Proposed Sessions
• Transport properties of multilayer multiferroics
• Multiferroic thin film growth, materials design, and processing
• Interfaces in multilayered ferroic heterostructures, functionally-graded ferroics,
artificial multiferroics
• Structure: defects and doping; the relationship between materials growth,
microstructure, and physical properties
• Theory and modeling of multiferroics
• Technological applications ranging from medicine to aerospace industry:
tunable high dielectric materials for high frequency applications; microelectro mechanical systems (MEMS); sensors, transducers, and nonlinear optical
devices; vibration damping, actuators, artificial muscles, self assembled actua tors and devices
Symposium Organizers
• Melanie Cole, U.S. Army Research Laboratory, USA; melanie.w.cole.civ@mailmil
• S. Pamir Alpay, University of Connecticut, USA
• Ichiro Takeuchi, University of Maryland, USA
• Timothy Haugan, U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory, USA
Abstract Submission Instructions
Visit www.ceramics.org/ema2016 to review the session topics
and select the “Submit Abstract” hyperlink to be directed to the
Abstract Central website. If you have questions, please contact
Marilyn Stoltz at [email protected] or 614-794-5868.
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E lectronic Materials
January 20-22 | DoubleTree by Hilton Orlando at
Technical Sessions
S2. Functional Materials: Synthesis Science, Properties, and
Integration
This symposium will bring together researchers from academia, government
laboratories, and industry to discuss the links bridging synthesis science, properties, and integration of functional crystalline materials. Advances in mechanisms
of material preparation and integration that lead to new materials discovery, new
property opportunities, and extensions to performance limits are of particular interest. The topic is motivated by the recent National Academies Report— Frontiers
in Crystalline Matter: From Discovery to Technology,—which identifies the need to
reinvigorate activities that focus on material growth, and to elevate the community’s recognition for synthesis. Topics of interest for this symposium include: (1)
advances in thin film, single crystal, and 2-D layer synthesis, particularly those that
access challenging processing windows, stabilize new phases, or create structures far from equilibrium; (2) advances in substrate design that extend thermal,
chemical, and mechanical stability, and provide new opportunities for epitaxy; (3)
synthesis methods monitored by in situ probes improve crystal growth understanding; and (4) integrating functional materials with base-metals, semiconductors, 2-D
materials, nanostructures, and sophisticated device platforms.
The spectrum of materials systems considered is broad intentionally, but related by
common attention to advanced synthesis and process flows, and to the property
and performance opportunities they create. This combination will also bridge the
functional electronic materials communities (e.g., epitaxy, transparent conductors,
piezoelectrics, energy storage, memories, etc.) with the vacuum science, semiconductor processing, characterization, and integration industry for highest impact
and knowledge sharing.
Proposed Sessions
• Refined synthesis routes to enable and advance properties • Controlling crystal growth morphology (within the structure zone model) • Controlling phase distribution in crystals, films, and nanolayers • Managing growth with volatile species • Advances in synthesis science that regulate point defects • Theory and modeling to enhance and inform synthesis • Integrating functional oxides with conventional semiconductors • Thin-film memory and piezoelectric materials • Novel substrates and electrodes • Crystal growth at temperature extremes, near Troom and approaching Tmelt • In situ thin film characterization to guide materials synthesis
Symposium Organizers
• Jon-Paul Maria, North Carolina State University, USA: [email protected]
• Jon Ihlefeld, Sandia National Laboratories, USA
• Ronald Polcawich, U.S. Army Research Laboratory, USA
call for papers
S3. Use of thermal energy for electrical power generation and
refrigeration: Fundamental science, materials development
and devices
Thermal energy has been used in a variety of ways in electrical power generation
and refrigeration under both transport and equilibrium conditions. This symposium
targets technologies that use thermal energy and the fundamental science that
enables it. Specific technologies of interest incluse thermoelectrics, thermophotovoltaics, electro-, magneto- and baro-caloric systems, Stirling and thermoacoustic
engines. The challenges to implementation or improvement have been materials
specific. The approaches of interest include novel material development, measurement standardization, bonding, ceramic processing, crystal chemistry, modeling,
nanostructured materials, devices, and others.
The symposium also aims to include the basic science underlying behavior of such
materials. Fundamental physics include phonon transport and interactions in solids,
in nanosystems, and across interfaces. Abstracts are encouraged on topics including, but not limited to, coherent phonon transport, non-local phonon conduction
around interfaces, phonon interference, the interplay between material structures
and intrinsic phonon scattering mechanisms, and how these processes relate to the
thermal conduction mechanisms in solids and across interfaces.
This symposium encourages contributions on topics outside the technologies
summarized above that take advantage of thermal energy for electrical power and
refrigeration. This symposium is a forum for discussing defect chemistry, conductivity, thermal conductivity optimization, caloric effects and applications for novel
conversion systems. It aims to increase interaction between communities that
normally work separately.
Proposed Sessions
• Theory and applications of thermoelectrics and related phenomena
• Theory and applications of caloric effects and Stirling engines
• Thermophotovoltaics and emerging thermal devices
• Fundamental physics of phonon transport
• Materials development, defect structure control and analysis
• Low dimensional materials and crystal chemistry approaches
• Nanoscale scattering effects
• Defects and defect chemistry and their effects on electrical and thermal
conductivity
Symposium Organizers
• Alp Sehirlioglu, Case Western Reserve University, USA; [email protected]
• David Singh, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA
• Antoine Maignan, CrisMat, France
• Winnie Wong-Ng, NIST, USA
• Anke Weidenkaff, University of Stuttgart, Germany
• Patrick Hopkins, University of Virginia, USA
• Edward P. Gorzkowski, Naval Research Laboratory, USA
Abstracts due by September 9, 2015
and Applications 2016
Sea World® | Orlando, Florida USA
S4. Ion-conducting Ceramics
Ion -onducting membranes are expected to be vital components of an increasingly
demanding global energy future. New technologies ranging from clean energy
production to electrical energy storage and chemical separations will require development of robust, highly functional ion conducting ceramics. This symposium will
bring together researchers from academia, government labs, and industry to discuss
critical properties-process-performance relationships central to the effective development of ion-conducting ceramics. Presentations and discussions are expected
to address technical challenges and insights across a wide range of length scales
(atomic to macroscopic), address both cation and anion conductors, and consider a
variety of ion-conducting materials relevant to a diverse application space.
Proposed Sessions
• Novel ion-conducting materials
• Influences of ceramic processing on ion conduction
• Cation-conducting ceramics for energy storage
• Oxygen conductors
• Membranes for chemical separations
• Computational studies in ion-transport ceramics
Symposium Organizers
• Jon Ihlefeld, Sandia National Laboratories, USA; [email protected]
• Frank Chen, University of South Carolina, USA
• Jeff Sakamoto, University of Michigan, USA
• Erik Spoerke, Sandia National Laboratories, USA
• Hui (Claire) Xiong, Boise State University, USA
• Strain, microstructures and functionality tuning in vertical aligned nanocomposites
• Novel phenomena arising from structural distortion, charge redistribution, as
well as spin and orbital order rearrangement in proximity to the oxide interface
• Theory, modeling, and first-principles calculations of nanoscale phenomena in
functional oxide thin films
• Functionalities including ferroelectric, dielectric, magnetic, magnetoelectric and
photonic properties as well as electronic and thermal transport characteristics of
single-phase and nanocomposite oxide thin films
• Device fabrication of oxide thin films and nanocomposites for energy harvesting,
memories, actuators, sensors, optical, electronic, and optoelectronic applications
Symposium Organizers
• Roman Engel-Herbert, Pennsylvania State University, USA; [email protected]
• Aiping Chen, Los Alamos National Laboratory, USA
• Judith L. MacManus-Driscoll, University of Cambridge, UK
• James Rondinelli, Northwestern University, USA
• Bharat Jalan, University of Minnesota, USA
• Junwoo Son, Pohang University of Science and Technology, South Korea
• Oliver Bierwagen, Paul Drude Insitute for Solid State Electronics, Germany
S5. Multifunctional Nanocomposites
This symposium provides a platform to present and discuss recent advances in
the growth, characterization, design, property prediction, and study of interface
phenomena in nanocomposite oxide thin films. Topics include the identification of
materials design strategies to discover novel phenomena in this class of materials
and theoretical prediction of material properties using first-principle calculation
methods; synthesis of multilayer oxide thin films and vertically aligned nanocomposites; structure, defect, and interface characterization and their relationship
to material properties; and device fabrication for energy harvesting, memories,
actuators, sensors, optical, electronic and optoelectronic applications. Specific areas
of interest are magnetic, electric and photonic properties as well as electronic and
thermal transport phenomena of oxide thin films, vertical nanocomposites, lateral
multilayers and structures with quantum-confinement.
Proposed Sessions
• Synthesis and growth of nanocomposite oxide thin films including heterostruc tures, layered structures, superlattices, and vertically aligned nanocomposites
• Influence of growth, stoichiometry, doping, strain and microstructure on proper ties of nanostructured oxide thin films and vertical aligned nanocomposites
• Microstructures and defects characterization
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Technical Sessions
S6. Computational Design of Electronic Materials
Given the pressing requirements for new high-performance electronic materials to
meet important application needs, computational methods are required to understand unusual phenomena and to design new classes of materials. Computational
exploration of properties of novel materials has potential to mitigate costs, risks,
and time involved in preparing and testing potentially useful materials, and could
yield valuable insights into the fundamental factors underlying material behavior.
Moreover, such computational design efforts form the core of the Materials Genome
Initiative. This symposium will bring together materials scientists and engineers from
academia, industry, and national laboratories to discuss the current state-of-the-art
(and future outlook) within various types of materials modeling and incorporated experiments and materials informatics efforts, aimed primarily at electronic materials.
Proposed Sessions
• Materials by design: computational and/or experimental emerging strategies for
searching, designing, and discovering new electronic materials
• High-throughput data generation and screening via first principles and other
computations
• Modeling at different (and across) scales (first principles, force fields, phase field, etc.)
• Novel phenomena at interfaces and heterostructures: interface driven functional
materials
• Low-dimensional systems (quantum dots, nanowires, graphene, and related systems)
• Theoretical challenges and development of accurate description of defects and
interface properties
• Electronic and/or thermal transport in electronic materials and low-dimensional
structures
Symposium Organizers
• Mina Yoon, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA; [email protected]
• Wolfgang Windl, Ohio State University, USA
• Ghanshyam Pilania, Los Alamos National Laboratory, USA
• James Rondinelli, Northwestern University, USA
• Emmanouil Kioupakis, University of Michigan, USA
S7. Processing and microstructure of functional ceramics: Sintering,
grain growth and their impact on the materials properties
Materials processing is important for functional ceramics applications, such as
sensors, ferroelectric actuators, dielectrics, and oxygen as well as lithium-ion conductors. In these technologies, grain boundaries have a strong impact on device
performance. Possible influences of processing and microstructure arise, e.g., from
local defect redistribution, space charges, mechanical stresses, and anisotropy
of transport processes at grain boundaries. These effects and their interplay with
materials properties need to be understood on a fundamental level in order to
optimize materials for given applications.
This symposium aims to bring together researchers working on all aspects of bulk
functional ceramics processing, microstructure, and its evolution and relationship
to materials properties. The focus is on perovskite materials (e.g. BaTiO3, BKT, KNN,
call for papers
SrTiO3, LLTO, BSCF), but other functional ceramics are considered (e.g. spinel, ZnO,
CeO2, ZrO2, TiO2), also.
Proposed Sessions
• Sintering techniques of functional ceramics: conventional sintering and field assisted sintering
• Grain growth and abnormal grain growth
• Effects of nonstoichiometry
• Defects, space charge, and their interplay with microstructure evolution
• Transport along and across grain boundaries
Symposium Organizers
• Wolfgang Rheinheimer, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany;
[email protected]
• Michael Hoffmann, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany
S8. Interface Structure, Orientation, and Composition:
Influence on Properties and Kinetics
Interface properties and kinetics can be controlled by structure, composition and
orientation at atomistic, mesoscopic, and microscopic scales. Chemical adsorption,
local structure, orientation, and microscopic shape (faceting) of interfaces have
been observed to change with thermodynamic parameters (chemical potential,
temperature, etc.), but the influence of these features on interface motion (grain
growth, coarsening, sintering) and properties (grain boundary diffusion, electric
and ionic or thermal conductivity, wetting) has not been fully correlated with the
observed transitions. This symposium will examine both structure of interfaces
over a variety of thermodynamic variables and influence of interface transitions on
properties and kinetics.
Proposed Sessions
• Interface structure and composition
– Atomistic structures – Simulations
• Observations
– Microscale structures
• Segregation
• Adsorption
• Interfacial energies
– Mesoscale structures
• Facetting
• Reconstructions
• Interface motion
– Grain growth
– Faceting
• Interface properties
– Electrical / Ionic
– Thermal
– Triple junction effects
– Optical
Symposium Organizers
• Dominique Chatain, CINaM, France; [email protected]
Abstracts due by September 9, 2015
and Applications 2016
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• Wayne Kaplan, Technion, Israel
• John Blendell, Purdue University, USA
• Carol Handwerker, Purdue University, USA
S9. Recent Developments in Superconducting Materials and
Applications
Recently, significant progress has been made worldwide in both application and
fundamental understanding of high-temperature superconductors (HTS). For example, HTS (such as cuprates) wires and tapes have been commercially produced;
advances continue to be made in fabrication and application of superconducting
MgB2; and discovery of iron-based superconductors has set off an intense search
for new superconductors with even higher transition temperature. However, challenges remain to increase overall current carrying ability for applications and to
correlate interplay between structure, magnetism, and superconductivity in these
superconductors on micro-, meso-, and nanoscales for understanding the superconductivity mechanism. This symposium will cover recent developments in processing of superconducting materials, improved flux-pinning via structural and defect
optimization, recent advances in discovery of new superconductors, and progress in
understanding unconventional superconductivity. Development and status of applications, and associated materials science drivers and issues will also be addressed.
Proposed Sessions
• Issues related to the fabrication of low-cost and high-performance second
generation coated conductors
• Flux-pinning engineering in thick HTS films via structural and defect optimization
• Processing and properties of cuprates, MgB2, and iron-based superconductors
• New superconducting materials and phenomena
• Characterization of structural, magnetic, and superconducting properties
• Electronic structure and superconductivity mechanism
• AC-losses
• Applications and related material issues including wire properties
Symposium Organizers
• Gang Wang, Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China;
[email protected]
• Xingjiang Zhou, Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
• Tim Haugan, Air Force Research Laboratory, USA
• Haiyan Wang, Texas A&M University, USA
S10. Emerging functionalities in layered-oxide and related materials
Layered variations of oxide materials, such as binary compounds and clay-like
structures, not only usually inherit the functional traits of their parents, but also
possess multiple additional channels for property modification and fine-tuning. The
realm of current and prospective applications of these materials includes — but is
not exhausted by — electronics, sensors, catalysts, and molecular sieves. Furthermore, plentiful opportunities for cross-pollination and fusion, as well as design of
novel functionalities exist by virtue of straightforward incorporation of slabs with
different structure and chemical identity into the same, layered geometry. However,
synthesis and processing of such complex interfacial compounds present a variety
of serious new challenges, compared to their “mundane” nonlayered counterparts.
This symposium will bring together experts from academia, industry, and national
laboratories to discuss the current state-of-the-art (and future directions) in theoretical modeling, synthesis, characterization and processing of functional layered
oxides, with a primary focus on electronic materials and their applications.
Proposed Sessions
• Synthesis, characterization, and processing of new layered materials
• Soft-chemistry related material synthesis and transformation approaches
• Chemistry and physics within interlayer galleries, including ionic and molecular
defects, intercalation, and diffusion
• Microstructures and nanostructures in layered materials
• Theoretical modeling and design of materials with new functionalities across
length scales
• Device applications based on electronic and other functionalities, including
molecular sensing, capture, and release
Symposium Organizers
• Serge M. Nakhmanson, University of Connecticut, USA; [email protected]
• Bharat Jalan, University of Minnesota, USA
• Edward Gorzkowski, U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, USA
S11. Advanced electronic Materials: Processing, structures,
properties and applications
This symposium brings together materials and engineering researchers from academia and industry to present the latest advances in electronic materials, including
synthesis/processing, and characterization of dielectric, piezoelectric, pyroelectric
and ferroelectric materials in bulk ceramics and single crystals. These materials have
tremendous impact on a variety of technologies, including ultrasonic transducers,
memories, high-energy storage, energy harvesting, actuators, sensors, and tunable
microwave devices. Other topics of interest are (but not limited to) nanoscale domain phenomena, defect chemistry, structure–property relationships, electrocaloric
and electric-field -nduced phase transitions.
Proposed Sessions
• Advanced electronic materials, including ferroelectric, piezoelectric, dielectric,
electrostrictive, pyroelectric, electrocaloric, and flexoelectric materials
• Materials design, new materials and structures, and emerging applications
• Characterization of materials, crystal structure, phase transitions, as well as
electrical, mechanical, electromechanical, and other functional properties
• Energy storage, conversion and harvesting materials, and device structures
• Lead-free piezoelectrics
• Reliability of electronic materials and devices
Symposium Organizers
• Shujun Zhang, The Pennsylvania State University, USA; [email protected]
• Xiaoli Tan, Iowa State University, USA
• Kyle Webber, Technische Universität Darmstadt, Germany
• Satoshi Wada, University of Yamanashi, Japan
ceramics.org/ema2016
call for papers
Abstracts due by September 9, 2015
Electronic
Materials and
Applications 2016
600 N. Cleveland Avenue, Suite 210
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January 20-22
DoubleTree by Hilton Orlando at Sea World®
Orlando, Florida USA
ceramics.org/ema2016
ceramics.org/ema2016
Electronic Materials
and Applications 2016
January 20-22 | DoubleTree by Hilton Orlando at Sea World® | Orlando, Florida USA
Abstracts due by September 9, 2015
call for papers